Depression is a Killer for Heart Attack Victims,
Study Finds
'There is a whole series of factors that link
depression and heart disease'
Dec. 8, 2007 Dying from depression may be a
bigger threat that many thought, particularly for older people. Depression nearly triples the risk of
death following a heart attack, even when accounting for other heart
attack risk factors, according to research presented today at the
American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP) annual meeting.
| |
Related Stories |
|
| |
Osteoporosis Gets an Early Start for Depressed
Younger Women
Depression linked to bone-thinning in premenopausal
women, immune system involved
Nov. 29, 2007
Life Expectancy Cut 25 Years for Patients with
Mental Illnesses Due to Poor Care, Cardiovascular Disease
Medicare patients hospitalized for heart attacks had
19% increase in mortality for patients with any mental disorder, 34%
increase with schizophrenia.
Oct. 17, 2007
Large Study Proves Antidepressants Lower Suicide
Risk for All Adults
National Institute of Mental Health funds study of
226,866 patients
July 6, 2007
Elderly Patients Not Responding to Depression
Therapy Improve with Second Drug
84% of depressed elderly have problems in initial
treatment
June 1, 2007
Senior Citizens and Depression is the Latest Topic
on NIHSeniorHealth
National Institute on Aging, National Library of
Medicine work together to produce special senior-friendly Website
January 16, 2007
Anxious, Depressed Senior Citizens Turn More Often
to Alternative Therapies
They are not doing it
for a cure seniors
don't believe it is treatable
July 6, 2006
Read the latest news
on
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health |
|
Among 360 depressed, post myocardial infarction
patients followed for more than six years in this study, those who did
not recover from their depression in the first six months were more than
twice as likely to die.
This study was one of several presented at a panel
which examined the links between depression and vascular disease.
There is an unequivocal link between depression
and heart disease, but it is not clear what causes this link, said
Alexander Glassman, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia
University, College of Physicians and Surgeons and ACNP member.
There is a whole series of factors that link
depression and heart disease and we are just beginning to understand how
antidepressants act in people who have these conditions together.
Additional risk factors that tend to be major medical predictors of
death from a heart attack include the severity of the heart attack and
variability in various measures of heart function during recovery.
Depression has increasingly been recognized to
increase the risk for cardiovascular disease. Possible reasons for this
association include sticky platelets, a condition depressed patients are
likely to have, or autonomic nervous activity, which increases heart
irritability.
Ronald S. Duman, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and
pharmacology at Yale University School of Medicine and an ACNP member,
also presented research on this topic. His work examined molecular
mechanisms and the identity of the protein, vascular endothelial growth
factor (VEGF). VEGF is a key growth factor in the formation of vascular
cells and was originally identified and studied for its role in the
formation of vascular tissues.
We found that different classes of antidepressants
increase the expression of VEGF in the hippocampus (the part of the
brain which influences memory), which may partly explain how certain
antidepressants are more effective than others, said Duman.
Changes in
brain levels of VEGF contribute importantly to the antidepressant
response and thats why studying VEGF function may be useful in
developing medications that are more effective and rapid acting.
The panel also included presentations from Kevin
Tracey, M.D. and Gregory Miller, Ph.D., who presented evidence
indicating the brain has significant control over the levels of
inflammatory molecules called cytokines in other parts of the body, and
that these levels are altered in depression and associated with an
increased risk for heart disease.
And Charles Nemeroff M.D., Ph.D., and
professor and chair of the department of psychiatry at Emory University,
presented data showing the impact of stressful events early in life on
the response to stress later in life. These events precede either
depression or heart disease and could potentially contribute to
vulnerability for both conditions.
Editors Notes:
ACNP, founded in 1961, is a professional
organization of more than 700 leading scientists, including four Nobel
Laureates. The mission of ACNP is to further research and education in
neuropsychopharmacology and related fields in the following ways:
promoting the interaction of a broad range of scientific disciplines of
brain and behavior in order to advance the understanding of prevention
and treatment of disease of the nervous system including psychiatric,
neurological, behavioral and addictive disorders; encouraging scientists
to enter research careers in fields related to these disorders and their
treatment; and ensuring the dissemination of relevant scientific
advances.